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Agronomy and Crop Sciences Commons

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Series

2017

Peanut

Articles 1 - 2 of 2

Full-Text Articles in Agronomy and Crop Sciences

Characterization Of Small Rna Populations In Non-Transgenic Andaflatoxin-Reducing-Transformed Peanut, Imana L. Power, Phat M. Dang, Victor S. Sobolev, Valerie Orner, Joseph L. Powell, Marshall C. Lamb, Renée S. Arias Jan 2017

Characterization Of Small Rna Populations In Non-Transgenic Andaflatoxin-Reducing-Transformed Peanut, Imana L. Power, Phat M. Dang, Victor S. Sobolev, Valerie Orner, Joseph L. Powell, Marshall C. Lamb, Renée S. Arias

United States Department of Agriculture-Agricultural Research Service / University of Nebraska-Lincoln: Faculty Publications

Aflatoxin contamination is a major constraint in food production worldwide. In peanut (Arachis hypogaea L.), these toxic and carcinogenic aflatoxins are mainly produced by Aspergillus flavus Link and A. parasiticus Speare. The use of RNA interference (RNAi) is a promising method to reduce or prevent the accumula-tion of aflatoxin in peanut seed. In this study, we performed high-throughput sequencing of small RNApopulations in a control line and in two transformed peanut lines that expressed an inverted repeattargeting five genes involved in the aflatoxin-biosynthesis pathway and that showed up to 100% less aflatoxin B1 than the controls. The objective was …


Chemical Interruption Of Late Season Flowering To Improve Harvested Peanut Maturity, Marshall C. Lamb, Ronald B. Sorensen, Christopher L. Butts, Phat M. Dang, C. Y. Chen, Renée S. Arias Jan 2017

Chemical Interruption Of Late Season Flowering To Improve Harvested Peanut Maturity, Marshall C. Lamb, Ronald B. Sorensen, Christopher L. Butts, Phat M. Dang, C. Y. Chen, Renée S. Arias

United States Department of Agriculture-Agricultural Research Service / University of Nebraska-Lincoln: Faculty Publications

Peanut (Arachis hypogaea) is a botanically indeterminate plant where flowering, fruit initiation, and pod maturity occurs over an extended time period during the growing season. As a result, the maturity and size of individual peanut pods vary considerably at harvest. Immature kernels that meet commercial edible size specifications negatively affect quality during processing due to their increased propensity for off flavors, higher moisture and water activity, and variable roasting properties. As peanuts progress toward maturation, late season flowers set within 40 days till harvest will not have sufficient time to develop into mature, marketable pods prior to harvest. …